Tuesday, 27 April 2010

Poetry/cake please

It strikes me how many Quakers are poetry lovers/writers. Or at least that's how it seems to me. In our newsletters, here on the blog, and now Roger's poem in The Friend.

So, it shouldn't surprise you that I had a lovely conversation about poetry after Meeting this past week. Partially about Roger's poem, but not just and not just really although I liked his poem and could publish a post just on why I like what he wrote down and pulls out of experiences for me (thank you for reminding me of the blue shirt). I like this about Quakers though, this word-and imagery-loving-ness.

I went home smiling about that and then I almost literally tripped over a poem I wrote last summer (well the book it was in) not about Quaker worship but because I had been trying to describe how the sacred occurs at other times.

And I felt inspired by that talk and by Roger to rewrite it...and then share it. I wonder how many of you have poems about Quakers too? How many poems are there in newsletters or in closed pages or whispered on tongues but never spoken aloud? Wouldn't it be nice to publish/re-publish some of them here together?

8 comments:

Quakers are also it seems extremely fond of cakes. The subject of cakes, one way or another, comes up pretty frequently. I used to have some thought about meeting for worship being like cake, with the spoken ministry being like icing on the cake. But something else (in my mind, at that time...) was the cherry on the icing on the cake... And now, for the life of me, I cant think what the cherry would have been.

Laughed when I saw the poem because am sure I thought I was being terribly inventive when I first wrote it...but need to get in line obviously. Since writing that realise have had so many conversations about the importance of cake and cake-as-metaphor (even at Bookclub) that really have nothing to do with me or my poetry so it must be something more...possibly Quaker-related :-)? Or just an adjunct of drinking tea (now coffee)/being social/feeling at "home" together in England? Not sure.

Thought sometimes those coughs etc. make the silence seem deeper but draw attention to the fact you are together. But then thought for me maybe it's the sense of the meeting sometimes? Can this term be used in this way? Or is it really used more after Meetings for Business I wonder? But Meetings for Worship do tend to fit into overall themes/senses that have nothing to do with individual emotions and what people have said. Is this the right way to apply this then?

Anyway am doing the Becoming Friends course and am looking up words etc. to make sure I really understand them so "centring down" into super nerd mode here. Thanks for posting this Laura. Enjoyed thinking about this. Here's an interesting blog post on the sense of the meeting in broader contexts as well, interesting:

Hi Nadine,Thanks for your beautiful poem!Sometimes Friends refer to the 'exercise of the Meeting' as the theme that sometimes emerges during Meeting for Worship, when different Friends' spoken ministry gradually leads towards deeper 'layers' of insight. Could this be the cherry? (or maybe it's the notices...)

I appreciate this term Craig, thanks. It's not one I would have known how to use.

That is a wonderful poem. Thank you Ray. I haven't read Mary Oliver but this makes me want to explore her. I remember last year Maurice spoke about one of her poems in Meeting and that really struck me as well. A couple lines stuck with me as I think some will from the poem you've just quoted here. This is the one Maurice spoke of, I'm not sure if it's in the same collection.

Wild Geese

You do not have to be good.You do not have to walk on your kneesFor a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.You only have to let the soft animal of your bodylove what it loves.Tell me about your despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.Meanwhile the world goes on.Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rainare moving across the landscapes,over the prairies and the deep trees,the mountains and the rivers.Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,are heading home again.Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,the world offers itself to your imagination,calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting --over and over announcing your placein the family of things.

That poem is wonderful, thankyou Nadine, and Maurice and Ray and Mary Oliver and all the others too in this chain of connectedness. I am just back from a weekend at Woodbrooke on 'Sex and the Spirit' and those fourth and fifth lines are incredibly powerful and pertinent. Plus Woodbrooke has great food, including cake.